An instance of the popular matching problem (POP-M) consists of a set of applicants and a set of posts. Each applicant has a preference list that strictly ranks a subset of the posts. A matching M of applicants to posts is popular if there is no other matching M′ such that more applicants prefer M′ to M than prefer M to M′. Abraham et al. (SIAM J. Comput. 37:1030–1045, 2007) described a linear time algorithm to determine whether a popular matching exists for a given instance of POP-M, and if so to find a largest such matching. A number of variants and extensions of POP-M have recently been studied. This paper provides a characterization of the set of popular matchings for an arbitrary POP-M instance in terms of a structure called the switch...
We investigate the following problem: given a set of jobs and a set of people with preferences over ...
We consider the problem of matching applicants to posts where applicants have preferences over posts...
We consider the landscape of popular matchings in a bipartite graph G where every vertex has strict ...
An instance of the popular matching problem (POP-M) consists of a set of applicants and a set of pos...
We consider the problem of matching a set of applicants to a set of posts, where each applicant has ...
We consider the problem of matching a set of applicants to a set of posts, where each applicant has ...
We study the problem of matching a set of applicants to a set of posts, where each applicant has an ...
AbstractWe consider the problem of matching people to items, where each person ranks a subset of ite...
We study the problem of matching applicants to jobs under one-sided preferences; that is, each appli...
AbstractWe study the problem of matching applicants to jobs under one-sided preferences; that is, ea...
We study the problem of matching applicants to jobs under one-sided preferences: that is, each app...
We consider a variant of the popular matching problem here. The input instance is a bipartite graph ...
AbstractIn this paper we consider the problem of computing an “optimal” popular matching. We assume ...
In this paper we consider the problem of computing an “optimal” popular matching. We assume that our...
We consider the problem of matching people to jobs, where each person ranks a subset of jobs in an o...
We investigate the following problem: given a set of jobs and a set of people with preferences over ...
We consider the problem of matching applicants to posts where applicants have preferences over posts...
We consider the landscape of popular matchings in a bipartite graph G where every vertex has strict ...
An instance of the popular matching problem (POP-M) consists of a set of applicants and a set of pos...
We consider the problem of matching a set of applicants to a set of posts, where each applicant has ...
We consider the problem of matching a set of applicants to a set of posts, where each applicant has ...
We study the problem of matching a set of applicants to a set of posts, where each applicant has an ...
AbstractWe consider the problem of matching people to items, where each person ranks a subset of ite...
We study the problem of matching applicants to jobs under one-sided preferences; that is, each appli...
AbstractWe study the problem of matching applicants to jobs under one-sided preferences; that is, ea...
We study the problem of matching applicants to jobs under one-sided preferences: that is, each app...
We consider a variant of the popular matching problem here. The input instance is a bipartite graph ...
AbstractIn this paper we consider the problem of computing an “optimal” popular matching. We assume ...
In this paper we consider the problem of computing an “optimal” popular matching. We assume that our...
We consider the problem of matching people to jobs, where each person ranks a subset of jobs in an o...
We investigate the following problem: given a set of jobs and a set of people with preferences over ...
We consider the problem of matching applicants to posts where applicants have preferences over posts...
We consider the landscape of popular matchings in a bipartite graph G where every vertex has strict ...